A Führer for a Father by Jim Davidson

The life of Jim Davidson – prize-winning historian, academic and former editor of Meanjin – warrants a biography of its own. However, Davidson is clear from the first pages that this book is not an autobiography, but rather an exploration of a relationship between a father and his son.

It is also a vivid account of a particular sphere of Melbourne domestic life in the twentieth century and an intriguing portrait of a family who were very much a product of their time. Jim Davidson senior was a ‘frontiersman’, attracted to places once considered ‘unsettled’: South Africa, Fiji, New Guinea and Arnhem Land. His imperial dominance was not just apparent in his public life but was devastating in his private life as well. He was physically and psychologically abusive to those closest to him and unable to ever accept his son’s homosexuality. Davidson ( junior) is fantastic at penning pithy one-liners: for instance, he describes his father as the ‘domestic face of colonialism’. His exploration of the patriarchal authoritarianism of colonialism, both in public and on the domestic front, is fascinating and disturbing.

Davidson writes in the final pages of his memoir that he has tried and failed to remember the good things about his father. In actual fact, the book as a whole shows an understanding of the complexities of Jim Davidson senior and possibly paints a far more nuanced and sympathetic portrait of a father and son relationship than the author intended.


Kara Nicholson

Cover image for A Führer for a Father

A Führer for a Father

Jim Davidson

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